The Commercial Appeal

Woods closes a disappoint­ing ’20

- Adam Woodard and Steve Dimeglio

AUGUSTA, Ga. – His two children nor his mother were waiting just past the 18th green to enthusiast­ically embrace a revived, triumphant Masters champion as they were in 2019.

Thousands of patrons weren’t at the ready to roaringly celebrate. And fellow winners of the green jacket weren’t lined up near the clubhouse to zealously congratula­te an inspiring conquest.

Instead, the title defense of Tiger Woods ended in near silence on Sunday.

The five-time Masters champion closed with a 4-over-par 76, which tied his highest score ever in the Masters as a profession­al and included a 10 at the par-3 12th, his highest score ever recorded on any hole in his PGA Tour career. Despite finishing with four consecutiv­e birdies and five on his last six holes, Woods finished the 84th Masters at 1under 287 with rounds of 68-71-72-76.

Only 50 people were around the 18th green and politely applauded as Woods knocked in a 16-foot putt for birdie. Instead of racing to hug his children, Woods slowly walked to the scoring area.

“I’ve hit a few too many shots than I wanted to today, and I will not have the chairman be putting the green jacket on me,” he said. “I’ll be passing it on.”

Woods’ final round wasn’t void of theater, both tragic and jubilant.

The highlight? He birdied the final four holes and five of his last six.

Unfortunat­ely, this explosion followed his implosion that marked the lowlight of the week. For that, we head to the heart of Amen Corner, where in the 2019 Masters leader Francisco Molinari and top contenders Tony Finau, Brooks Koepka and Ian Poulter dumped balls into Rae’s Creek that helped propel Woods to his fifth Masters title.

This year, Woods hit not one, not two, but three balls into Rae’s Creek and putted out for a 10. His tee shot with an 8iron spun back into the water, as did his next shot after taking his penalty drop. Hitting five, Woods found one of the two back bunkers. From an awkward lie, Wood skulled his sixth shot over the green into the water again. After taking a drop, he hit his eighth shot onto the back fringe and two-putted for a 10.

His previous worst score on any hole on the PGA Tour came in the 1997 Memorial when he made a 9 on the par-3 fourth hole in the third round. His previous worst score in the Masters was an 8 - on the eighth hole in round one in 1999 and on 15th hole in the second round in 2013.

“I committed to the wrong wind,” Woods said. “From there I hit a lot more shots and had a lot more experience­s there in Rae’s Creek. This sport is awfully lonely sometimes. You have to fight it. No one is going to bring you off the mound or call in a sub. That’s what makes this game so unique and so difficult mentally. We’ve all been there. Unfortunat­ely I’ve been there and you just have to turn around and figure out the next shot, and I was able to do that coming home.”

His caddie, Joe Lacava, told Woods that “you’ve got five green jackets and you made a 10 on the 12th hole. You got it all covered.”

Still, a year that started with so much promise ended with a disappoint­ing thud.

After all, Woods had won his recordtyin­g 82nd PGA Tour title in Japan the previous fall, was the best player in the Presidents Cup in December and looked well suited to successful­ly defend a Masters title, make a run for a spot in the Tokyo Olympics and pursue placement on the U.S. Ryder Cup team when January 1 rolled around.

Woods had just one top-10 in nine starts and didn’t taste Sunday contention except once in January. He likely will not play again until the 2021 Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. In the two-month interim, he will train, test equipment, fulfill sponsorshi­p obligation­s, attend to other duties associated with his foundation and relax and spend quality time with his family.

“Well, starting out the year, it was like any other year, but we all quickly realized that this year is unlike anything we’ve ever experience­d,” Woods said, alluding to the COVID-19 global pandemic that shut down golf for 13 weeks starting in March. “We’re lucky to have the opportunit­y to have our sport continue to go. I had a busy December and then the normal ramp-up to the West Coast swing and then all of a sudden it came to a halt.”

Lacava said his boss never got things rolling.

“He played well in San Diego and then shut it down and never got it untracked. A little disappoint­ing. But it’s over and we look forward to 2021,” Lacava said.

Similar. Never got it rolling. Surely he wants to play well here, it’s his favorite spot. There were no excuses.

He worked pretty hard this week. If he continues to do that, there will be some good times next year. He drove it well this week for the most part, hit a lot of different shots, the high bombs, little low cutters. He’s working the ball nicely and he feels pretty decent. If he can stay healthy, there were some good signs this week.

“The scores didn’t translate. Forget the 10.”

Woods will turn his full attention and motivation to 2021 late in December and will eye the Masters, which is but five months away.

“It is normally nine months, and trust me, I know because I’ve had to deal with it, trying to go for four in a row (as he did in 2001) and all the media and dealing with all the different circumstan­ces leading into it,” he said. “Hopefully if everything continues the way it is going right now, then we’re able to have this event in April.”

 ?? MICHAEL MADRID/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Tiger Woods hits from the third tee during the final round of the Masters on Sunday in Augusta, Ga.
MICHAEL MADRID/USA TODAY SPORTS Tiger Woods hits from the third tee during the final round of the Masters on Sunday in Augusta, Ga.

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